4.7 Article

Microfluidic conceived pH sensitive core-shell particles for dual drug delivery

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 478, Issue 1, Pages 78-87

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2014.10.010

Keywords

Microfluidics; Cytotoxicity; Dual drug delivery; Poly(acrylamide-co-carboxy ethyl acrylate); pH-sensitive

Funding

  1. Government College University, Faisalabad, Pakistan

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In current study, we report on the synthesis of core shell microparticles for dual drug delivery by means of a two co-axial microfluidic device and online UV assisted free radical polymerization. Before developing pH-sensitive particles, ketoprofen loaded poly(methyl aaylate) core ranitidine HCl loaded poly(acrylamide) shell particles were produced. Influence of inner and outer phases flow rates on particle size, shape, core diameter, shell thickness, and drug release properties was studied. All the particles were monodispersed with coefficient of variation below 5%. Furthermore, their diameter ranged from 100 to 151 mu m by increasing continuous (Q(c)) to middle (Q(m)) phase flow rate ratio (Q(c)/Q(m)). Core diameter varied from 58 to 115 mu m by decreasing middle (Q(m)) to inner (Q(i)) phase flow rate ratio (Q(m)/Q(i)) at constant continuous phase flow rate as confirmed by SEM images. It was observed that an optimum concentration of acrylamide (30 wt%) and an appropriate combination of surfactants were necessary to get core shell particles otherwise Janus structure was obtained. FTIR confirmed the complete polymerization of core and shell phases. MTT assay showed variation in viability of cells under non-contact and contact conditions with less cytotoxicity for the former. Under non-contact conditions LD50 was 3.1 mg/mL. Release studies in USP phosphate buffer solution showed simultaneously release of ketoprofen and ranitidine HCl for non pH-sensitive particles. However, release rates of ranitidine HCl and ketoprofen were higher at low and high pH respectively. To develop pH-sensitive particles for colon targeting, the previous shell phase was admixed with few weight percentage of pH sensitive carboxyethyl acrylate monomer. Core and shell contained the same hydrophobic and hydrophilic model drugs as in previous case. The pH-sensitive shell prevented the release of the two entrapped molecules at low pH while increasing significantly their release rate at higher pH with a maximum discharge at colonic pH of 7.4. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available